• Watch Out for Scammers!

    We've now added a color code for all accounts. Orange accounts are new members, Blue are full members, and Green are Supporters. If you get a message about a sale from an orange account, make sure you pay attention before sending any money!

Shooting glasses for shooting scoped rifles?

Mr.BR

Private
Full Member
Minuteman
  • Oct 5, 2017
    5,274
    9,153
    Any tips on shooting glasses for use in competitions that are also opticaly worth any salt as it seems we spend bunch of $$ on scopes only to waste much of optical preformance using 10$ safety glasses.
     
    I've been using M-Frames as long as I can remember, don't impede the sight picture and you can get lenses with coatings from A to Z.
     
    • Like
    Reactions: Mr.BR
    Any glasses you wear are going to induce parallax errors, which is why so many LR guys don't wear them. As someone that has to have glasses to see (and can't get a scope to focus without them), I find it nearly impossible to get perfect parallax, as even the slightest shift of my head causes me to look through a different point in the lens.

    I commend you for thinking about safety, just be aware of the frustration that any kind of lenses will bring.
     
    • Like
    Reactions: Longshot231
    Single vision prescription Z87 safety glasses and frames at Wal Mart for $100 a pair. That’s what I use. If you ever experience a over pressured round or see it happen to others, you’ll were glasses forever after that. No issue with focus or parallax wearing them. Now, if your not using single vision, yes wearing glasses will induce issues in different shooting positions.
     
    Single vision prescription Z87 safety glasses and frames at Wal Mart for $100 a pair. That’s what I use. If you ever experience a over pressured round or see it happen to others, you’ll were glasses forever after that. No issue with focus or parallax wearing them. Now, if your not using single vision, yes wearing glasses will induce issues in different shooting positions.

    I have single vision lenses, and I still have issues with parallax.
     
    I gave up looking for shooting glasses that don't impede the sight picture. Have tried a few Oakleys and others with no luck. The only thing I have tried that worked well are made by a company called Pilla. They are big with the shotgun crowd (skeet, clays) but they worked great for me behind a rifle. The problem is the cost. They are horrifically expensive glasses. I haven't bought a pair yet and am not sure whether I will. I can shoot without glasses and focus the scope perfectly.
     
    I have single vision lenses, and I still have issues with parallax.

    Have you tried larger lenses? I had issues with my first pair where in some positions I was looking through them at the top or bottom of the lenses. I went with a larger lenses and a strap on my frames for consistent eye/glasses fit and that fixed it. Only issue I have had since it forgetting to add Fog-X to them.
     
    Have you tried larger lenses? I had issues with my first pair where in some positions I was looking through them at the top or bottom of the lenses. I went with a larger lenses and a strap on my frames for consistent eye/glasses fit and that fixed it. Only issue I have had since it forgetting to add Fog-X to them.

    I can lay prone, get in position, and just barely shift my head and watch the target and crosshair shift. I can't adjust the parallax out completely, there's always movement. I also have astigmatism, but I know other shooters with the same problem that don't have it.
     
    • Like
    Reactions: Paul from Oregon
    Cool deal, that’s the benefit of a forum. Hearing about issues/remedies never heard of or experienced by anyone else. Thanks for the heads up. I’ll keep a look out for this in the future. Don’t understand how this is possible, but worth another look. Question, are you sure your not inducing the issue due to poor shooting position. Example glasses and scope lenses are made to be viewed through the perfect center of either. Could your issue be improper head/eye position? Yes it’s difficult in some of the pretzel positions, but that’s what practice is for.
     
    • Like
    Reactions: Paul from Oregon
    I've played with this for a while and it's a pain in this ass. That said, the best thing I've found thus far are the large windshield style glasses like the Wiley-X Sabers or Oakley Ballistic Si type glasses. These seem to interfere least with my optics and provide sun/dust protection.
     
    I can lay prone, get in position, and just barely shift my head and watch the target and crosshair shift. I can't adjust the parallax out completely, there's always movement. I also have astigmatism, but I know other shooters with the same problem that don't have it.

    I have astigmatism and have no parallax issues.

    BTW, what scope are you using?
     
    • Like
    Reactions: lash
    Cool deal, that’s the benefit of a forum. Hearing about issues/remedies never heard of or experienced by anyone else. Thanks for the heads up. I’ll keep a look out for this in the future. Don’t understand how this is possible, but worth another look. Question, are you sure your not inducing the issue due to poor shooting position. Example glasses and scope lenses are made to be viewed through the perfect center of either. Could your issue be improper head/eye position? Yes it’s difficult in some of the pretzel positions, but that’s what practice is for.

    It's not a positioning issue.
     
    (02) NF Atacr, (01) NF SHV, (01) Vortex PST Gen 2, (03) Leupold Mark 4, (02) Bushnell HDMR2, (01) Athlon Ares BTR, etc. All scopes I have (know I forgot a few) never seen this issue. I would highly suggest looking at the possibility your the issue and not the equipment. That’s not a personal attack on you. Cognitive dissonance is the human struggle that drives the consumer impulse and the push against self accountability. I don’t claim to have the answer or be correct. I do claim the ability to be wrong and open to correction.
     
    I gave up looking for shooting glasses that don't impede the sight picture. Have tried a few Oakleys and others with no luck. The only thing I have tried that worked well are made by a company called Pilla. They are big with the shotgun crowd (skeet, clays) but they worked great for me behind a rifle. The problem is the cost. They are horrifically expensive glasses. I haven't bought a pair yet and am not sure whether I will. I can shoot without glasses and focus the scope perfectly.
    Fuck me !!! Pilla realy are $$$$$$$

    2019-05-22_18h27_56.jpg
     
    • Like
    Reactions: mjh30
    (02) NF Atacr, (01) NF SHV, (01) Vortex PST Gen 2, (03) Leupold Mark 4, (02) Bushnell HDMR2, (01) Athlon Ares BTR, etc. All scopes I have (know I forgot a few) never seen this issue. I would highly suggest looking at the possibility your the issue and not the equipment. That’s not a personal attack on you. Cognitive dissonance is the human struggle that drives the consumer impulse and the push against self accountability. I don’t claim to have the answer or be correct. I do claim the ability to be wrong and open to correction.

    Like I said, I have several friends with the exact same issue with parallax and glasses, so it's not just me. I've looked at switching to contacts, but haven't been able to find a brand/style yet that was comfortable for me.
     
    Like I said, I have several friends with the exact same issue with parallax and glasses, so it's not just me. I've looked at switching to contacts, but haven't been able to find a brand/style yet that was comfortable for me.

    The problem with contacts are your astigmatism. I have tried them and nothing corrects astigmatism despite the claims
     
    The problem with contacts are your astigmatism. I have tried them and nothing corrects astigmatism despite the claims

    I never got far enough into wearing them to see if they corrected anything as it felt like my eyes were being sandblasted when I had them in my eyes. I wore contacts in the past (when my astigmatism didn't need correction) without those problems, though. Go figure.
     
    I never got far enough into wearing them to see if they corrected anything as it felt like my eyes were being sandblasted when I had them in my eyes. I wore contacts in the past (when my astigmatism didn't need correction) without those problems, though. Go figure.

    I know. I have worn contacts before and tried them for 3 months. Glasses were superior in terms of correcting my astigmatism
     
    I always wanted glasses without a frame at the top of the lense. That frame seemed to get in my way. So far the best I have found are the Smith Pivlock V2. They are about the same cost as Oakley but rated higher for safety. Also the replacement lenses are around $20.
     
    Randolph engineering IMO makes the best shooting glasses. Match the color to your terrain and the targets will pop. Been using them for over a decade in all disciples of shooting. They are king in the shotgun world for a reason.
     
    • Like
    Reactions: bunsen27
    Randolph engineering IMO makes the best shooting glasses. Match the color to your terrain and the targets will pop. Been using them for over a decade in all disciples of shooting. They are king in the shotgun world for a reason.

    Any particular frame that you have had good luck with using?
     
    Clays ,Skeet and trap shooters shoot and track targets in the sky so i understand all the colored lenses with filters to block UV ,glare and limit light transmision, but can't think of any reason for anything but clear lenses for shooting PRS type events
     
    Last edited:
    • Like
    Reactions: aam
    I’ve been using the Pilla Outlaw X7 with what looks to be the the Truck Kit of lenses. Primary use has been clay shooting but I also use them for rifles. They have worked well prone behind a scope. For dedicated rifle shooting I would think a high light transmission lens would be good. They have lots of information on filtering for action shooting. Yes they cost a lot but you get what you pay for.

     
    I do 99% of my shooting with Vermilion and Light Purple. The other 1% is yellow for night/low light shooting.

    The benefit for PRS and other style shooting is you can help make targets pop out against the background terrain. Yellow, white and orange painted targets in a green background almost glow with the right lenses. Your eyes naturally track to them.
     
    • Like
    Reactions: Nik H
    Some optical engineer is going to have to explain how it's possible for a single lens behind the ocular to induce parallax error in a lens system in front of it.

    Parallax is adjusted between the Objective lens and the erector cell lenses ( in an FFP scope anyway). The ocular lens assembly simply magnifies that image. An additional lens correcting the vision of the wearer is acting just like the diopter setting on the eyepiece, correcting focus of the PARALLAX FREE image.

    Repeat after me, focus is not parallax, focus is NOT parallax.

    It's perfectly possible for the image of the target to be soft focus and parallax free. Once parallax has been adjusted, the image is in the same plane as the reticle. At that point, adjustment of the eyepiece power, diopter or wearing a prescription or plain safety lens is not going to change that.

    In any event, parallax error for practical shooting is really not much of an issue anyway. Unless you are wildly out of center, seeing a large black crescent, its hardly worth worrying about it. Note that if you are looking at the center of the FOV you are parallax free no matter how it's adjusted.

    In short, if you perceive parallax error, it's not due to your eye pro. Sorry Hollywood, it's a personal perception problem, not the lenses.
     
    I've been wearing Pilla glasses for about 4 years. Granted I started wearing them for skeet an everything about skeet is more expensive. What I like about them is corrective lenses fit in behind the colored Plano lenses
     
    Running Pilla's but just for Sporting Clays

    I'll drag them out to the ranch or next match to see how they look/work behind the TT
     
    I shoot in the Panther post models due they were first with clip in prescription lenses. If I was starting now it would be Outlaw X7
     
    • Like
    Reactions: Nik H
    I shoot pilla’s, the Matrix are the ones I use for rifle shooting, lightweight and help when it’s real sunny.

    https://pillasport.com/collections/all-performance-glasses/products/matrix

    I used the outlaws when I was trapshooting, purple color lenses, they really helped the orange birds become more visible especially with a green background. Definitely helpful trap shooting, if you get a chance give them a try.
    I have yet to notice any distortion.

    They do a lot of impact testing as well, somewhat helpful if something was to go wrong.
     
    @Nik H

    They're good glasses (X7-C) but I only use one lens (26ED I believe) so not using them to the real potential.

    I find myself shooting my rifle without glasses but I need to quit that bad habit.
     
    • Like
    Reactions: Nik H
    Would be interested to hear your thoughts and what model of Pilla you are using

    Like I said above, I’ve shot Pillas for a while now. Bought the first set in 2012 and have never looked back. I even use their lifestyle glasses for my regular sunglasses.

    Back when I was shooting sporting clays hard core they were essential equipment. Back then I was shooting 50k targets a year in PNW lighting conditions so the quick change lens system worked well. I never felt under gunned with the three lenses in the Truck Kit.

    They also work just as well behind the rifle which was a bonus. I just can’t understand people who spend $2-3k on a scope and won’t wear eye protection.
     
    I wear the Oakley tombstone reap or M frames.

    I have not had parallax problems with them. Yeah the Pillas are nice! I tried some at a sporting clays match, just couldn't justify them over the Oakley's.

    We shoot at two places that is 100% eye protection on the line. I like to set an example for my kids too.
     
    • Like
    Reactions: gpkon66
    In short, if you perceive parallax error, it's not due to your eye pro. Sorry Hollywood, it's a personal perception problem, not the lenses.

    As I stated earlier I wear prescription glasses with astigmatism correction, and I can't see through an optic without them. No matter what I do, and no matter what optic I use, I can't get a 100% parallax free image with a scope. Even the slightest head movement, and I can see a slight shift in alignment between the reticle and target. I spent 30+ minutes on the range one day trying, and never got it completely dialed out.
    That said, even when I see a shift, it's very minor through the optic - minor enough that it doesn't really seem to show up on paper when shooting groups. I can't think of a shot I have ever missed at a match due to parallax issues with my glasses - but I can see the alignment shift.
    Maybe it's my glasses, maybe it's my eyes. I can't try it without the glasses, so I can't eliminate them as the problem. Dunno what the hell else to tell you.
     
    Have you ever looked through a fixed parallax scope? Or, have someone else set the parallax for you. If you just look at how the scope and parallax adjustment works, you'll see that your glasses are not causing a parallax problem.

    It's possible you are seeing some other kind of distortion and then interpret that as parallax. Pincushion, barrel and mustache distortion all exist in prescription lens so most likely you are seeing that rather than parallax error.
     
    Have you ever looked through a fixed parallax scope? Or, have someone else set the parallax for you. If you just look at how the scope and parallax adjustment works, you'll see that your glasses are not causing a parallax problem.

    It's possible you are seeing some other kind of distortion and then interpret that as parallax. Pincushion, barrel and mustache distortion all exist in prescription lens so most likely you are seeing that rather than parallax error.

    That's entirely possible, especially knowing that astigmatism lenses are cut differently than non-astigmatism corrections. As I mentioned earlier, I know other shooters that have experienced similar issues, and I believe they all have astigmatism. I have a friend that ran into so many problems with glasses that he actually shoots without his glasses (he's able to see through the scope without them), and only puts them back on when the match is over.

    I have looked through fixed parallax optics, but don't own one at the moment. I didn't pay much attention to parallax on them, either, so I can't say if the problem exists on that type of optic. I've had friends set parallax on my optic before (as part of chasing an issue I was seeing with POI shift in mirage we eventually traced to a problem with my glasses), and I want to say that I still couldn't get it completely out, but I can't remember for sure. That was over 2 years ago now. I'll be at K&M this weekend, so I will try to get someone to try adjusting it for me and see if I can replicate it.
     
    • Like
    Reactions: Skeetshooter
    I never got far enough into wearing them to see if they corrected anything as it felt like my eyes were being sandblasted when I had them in my eyes. I wore contacts in the past (when my astigmatism didn't need correction) without those problems, though. Go figure.
    The way I had it explained to me by the guy who is gonna do my cataract surgery not my optometrist is that with really strong Rx the quality of vision just off the optical center changes drastically unless one is looking right through it dead center. If you are say a -2 and get a bit off optical center you don't walk into a wall.....but I might b/c w/o correction I'm essentially blind. In a perfect world I need freaking trifocal lenses, but I just live with bad intermediate vision and use distance glasses and swap to readers. My -7.5 L eye and -8 in shooting eye are so strong I have to keep my head very upright so I can look directly though the optical center b/c even off just a smidge and I drop off 20/20 quickly to where it's just garbled crap shapes. So when my image blurs downrange I always go to double checking my cheek weld to ensure it's locked up. Just something to think about if you have not considered that when struggling at a shoot. I've learned how to relax best I can b/c natural point of aim is really not anything I can strive for everything I do is derived out of keeping optical center of glasses as close to vertical as I can and lined up with scope which creates tension, but like anything else humans adapt best they can it ain't keeping me from the game!

    I'm not smart enough to identify if my struggles with Rx and downrange are exactly what you are experiencing, but I have a few things going on up to and including image quality, reticle focus, reticle/image seem to shift around unless I'm just dead nuts dialed up in the optical center of my Rx glasses.
     
    Last edited:
    How to pay is a better question. Their site is loaded with information on the lens color and effect. It really comes down to what will work for your type of shooting
    Clays ,Skeet and trap shooters shoot and track targets in the sky so i understand all the colored lenses with filters to block UV ,glare and limit light transmision, but can't think of any reason for anything but clear lenses for shooting PRS type events

    good points....I went with the Vigilante with the clearest possible lenses, my idea is that I like to have my prescription lenses inser behind the clearest protective screen, being mostly shooting PRS style
     
    ICE glasses from ESS are pretty good and you can normally find um for a reaonable price online. They have no top frame and I haven’t had them impede in any position.
     
    Obvious, but the eye is the most fragile/easily damaged part of the human body.

    I know guys that shoot without eye pro for bolt guns all the time. They are big boys and can make their own decisions.

    That said, I wear ballistic eyewear (Oakley) because of how vulnerable the eye is and I've watched pistols basically explode from double charged ammo. I will never purposely shoot without eye pro.

    And I'll give up slight parallax or other issue to protect my eyes to the best way I can.
     
    • Like
    Reactions: smokeon and lash
    There is a place in Denver called Tactical RX that sounds promising and they cater to to shooting sports...gonna try them shortly...
     
    not that they are the best probably not but I tried these and have had no problem with them in 2 years https://www.esseyepro.com/Crossblade_259_category.html think the package i got was 145.00 . I sm not positive , but think you can even get a clear or colored lens in your proscription , if that is what you are looking for . They like many have interchangeable lenses , at least it's better than loosing sight in your eye sight and not costing thousands of dollars .